A BJT includes a pillar formed on a buried oxide layer that is itself formed on a silicon substrate. The pillar has top and bottom surfaces and sidewalls, the bottom surface contacting the buried oxide layer and opposite the top surface. The pillar forms part of a base of the BJT. Si:C layers are formed on a bottom portion of each of the sidewalls of the pillar and leave a top portion of the sidewalls of the pillar exposed. A doped base contact is formed to contact at least part of the exposed sidewalls in the top portion of the pillar. E/C regions are formed abutting the Si:C layers. contacts are formed to connect to the doped base contact and to the E/C regions. Methods for forming the BJT are also disclosed.
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13. A bipolar junction transistor, comprising:
a pillar formed on a buried oxide layer that is itself formed on a silicon substrate, the pillar having top and bottom surfaces and sidewalls, the bottom surface contacting the buried oxide layer and opposite the top surface, wherein the pillar forms part of a base of the bipolar junction transistor;
Si:C layers formed on a bottom portion of each of the sidewalls of the pillar and leaving a top portion of the sidewalls of the pillar exposed;
a doped base contact formed to contact at least part of the exposed sidewalls in the top portion of the pillar;
emitter and collector regions abutting the Si:C layers; and
contacts connected to the doped base contact and to the emitter and collector regions.
1. A method for forming a bipolar junction transistor, comprising:
forming a pillar on a buried oxide layer that is itself formed on a silicon substrate, the pillar having top and bottom surfaces and sidewalls, the bottom surface contacting the buried oxide layer and opposite the top surface, wherein the pillar forms part of a base of the bipolar junction transistor;
forming a hanging spacer on the pillar, the hanging spacer formed to cover and abut the sidewalls of a top portion of the pillar and to cover a region over the top surface of the pillar, wherein a remaining part of each of the sidewalls is still exposed;
forming Si:C layers on the remaining, exposed bottom portion of each of the sidewalls of the pillar;
forming emitter and collector regions abutting the Si:C layers;
removing the hanging spacer; and
forming contacts to the base and to the emitter and collector regions.
2. The method of
3. The method of
4. The method of
5. The method of
6. The method of
7. The method of
8. The method of
9. The method of
10. The method of
the longitudinal length of the pillar has a center region in which the hanging spacer is formed and has fin ends at ends of the longitudinal length;
the method further comprises masking, prior to forming the hanging spacer on the pillar, the fin ends with a mask so that the hanging spacer is not formed on the fin ends during forming of the hanging spacer and removing the mask in the fin ends to reveal the top surface and sidewalls of the pillar in the fin ends; and
forming the doped base contact further comprises forming a part of the doped base contact over the revealed top surface and sidewalls of the pillar in the fin ends.
11. The method of
a longitudinal length of the pillar has a center region in which the hanging spacer is formed and has fin ends at ends of the longitudinal length;
the method further comprises masking, prior to forming the hanging spacer on the pillar, the fin ends with a mask so that the hanging spacer is not formed on the fin ends during forming of the hanging spacer;
the method further comprises, after forming emitter and collector regions abutting the Si:C layers, forming a top spacer on exposed surfaces of the emitter and collector regions, including top surfaces and sidewalls of the emitter and collector regions;
the method further comprises removing the mask in the fin ends to reveal the top surface and sidewalls of the pillar in the fin ends.
12. The method of
14. The apparatus of
15. The apparatus of
16. The apparatus of
17. The apparatus of
18. The apparatus of
19. The apparatus of
20. The apparatus of
21. The apparatus of
22. The apparatus of
the longitudinal length of the pillar has a center region in which the Si:C layers are formed and has fin ends at ends of the longitudinal length and in which the Si:C layers are not formed; and
a portion of the doped base contact is formed over and abuts a top surface and sidewalls of the pillar in the fin ends.
23. The apparatus of
a longitudinal length of the pillar has a center region in which the Si:C layers are formed and has fin ends at ends of the longitudinal length and in which the Si:C layers are not formed;
the apparatus further comprises a top spacer covering and abutting top surfaces and sidewalls of the emitter and collector regions but the top spacer does not cover a top surface and sidewalls of the pillar in the fin ends.
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This invention relates generally to semiconductors and, more specifically, relates to bipolar junction transistors.
This section is intended to provide a background or context to the invention disclosed below. The description herein may include concepts that could be pursued, but are not necessarily ones that have been previously conceived, implemented or described. Therefore, unless otherwise explicitly indicated herein, what is described in this section is not prior art to the description in this application and is not admitted to be prior art by inclusion in this section. Abbreviations that may be found in the specification and/or the drawing figures are defined below, after the main part of the detailed description section.
An SOI lateral bipolar junction transistor (L-BJT) fabricated with CMOS-compatible processes has shown competitive advantages with high drive current (e.g., greater than 3 mA/mm), low stand-by power, and operation voltages scalable with base materials. The narrow base of these designs allows for high frequency, which is highly desirable.
It is nonetheless challenging to make such thin base structures, as there can be dopant diffusion from the emitter and collector into the base during fabrication, and this dopant diffusion will, e.g., broaden the emitter and collector regions that lead to shorter spacing between them and increase the possibility of electrical short.
In an exemplary embodiment, a method for Ruining a bipolar junction transistor is disclosed. The method includes forming a pillar on a buried oxide layer that is itself formed on a silicon substrate. The pillar has top and bottom surfaces and sidewalls. The bottom surface contacts the buried oxide layer and opposite the top surface, wherein the pillar forms part of a base of the bipolar junction transistor. A hanging spacer is formed on the pillar, the hanging spacer formed to cover and abut the sidewalls of a top portion of the pillar and to cover a region over the top surface of the pillar, wherein a remaining part of each of the sidewalls is still exposed. The method also includes forming Si:C layers on the remaining, exposed bottom portion of each of the sidewalls of the pillar, and includes forming emitter and collector regions abutting the Si:C layers. The method further includes removing the hanging spacer and forming contacts to the base and to the emitter and collector regions.
In another exemplary embodiment, a bipolar junction transistor is disclosed that comprises a pillar formed on a buried oxide layer that is itself formed on a silicon substrate, the pillar having top and bottom surfaces and sidewalls, the bottom surface contacting the buried oxide layer and opposite the top surface, wherein the pillar forms part of a base of the bipolar junction transistor. The bipolar junction transistor also comprises Si:C layers formed on a bottom portion of each of the sidewalls of the pillar and leaving a top portion of the sidewalls of the pillar exposed and comprises a doped base contact formed to contact at least part of the exposed sidewalls in the top portion of the pillar. The bipolar junction transistor further comprises emitter and collector regions abutting the Si:C layers, and comprises contacts connected to the doped base contact and to the emitter and collector regions.
Each of
Each of
We propose a structure and an integration flow where we grow a diffusion limiting Si:C layer onto the sidewalls of narrow base material. Epitaxially forming the emitter and collector at typical selective epitaxial growth temperatures of 600-750C will not diffuse any dopant into the narrow base, which may be 9 nm-15 nm wide. In one embodiment, the Si:C has a doping gradient of dopant used for the emitter/collector regions from no dopant to high dopant. A 2-5 nm thick (with, e.g., 5×1019 carbon concentration doped) Si:C layer is sufficient to suppress any dopant movement from the emitter and collector during epitaxial emitter and collector formation. This structure will be thermally stable compared to conventional structures.
This BJT will work at very high frequencies, higher than reported in conventional structures. Prior Si-base (base width of 90 nm) L-BJT device shows a peakfT of 68 GHz. Modelling of structures described herein predicts a transit time of 10 psec at base width of 80 nm and <4 psec at base width of 10 nm when average collector current is >1.5 mA/μm.
An exemplary process flow to create a bipolar junction transistor, e.g., having a narrow base, in accordance with an exemplary embodiment is illustrated by the following.
In one embodiment the Si:C layer 170 has a doping gradient from no dopant to high dopant. See
Exemplary benefits and advantages of the process and the bipolar junction transistor 100 include the following.
1) The fin process is able to form a thin base with well-controlled width and wafer-scale production; by contract, an L-BJT formed with a planar CMOS process requires either extreme photo or e-beam lithography.
2) High aspect ratio of fin-like thin base with low-temperature epitaxy E/C enables high-frequency operation of the L-BJT device while maintaining sufficient current density; by contrast, an L-BJT formed with planar CMOS process is limited by trade-off between base width and E/C dopant diffusion.
If desired, the different functions and process steps discussed herein may be performed in a different order and/or concurrently with each other. Furthermore, if desired, one or more of the above-described functions and process steps may be optional or may be combined.
Although various aspects of the invention are set out in the independent claims, other aspects of the invention comprise other combinations of features from the described embodiments and/or the dependent claims with the features of the independent claims, and not solely the combinations explicitly set out in the claims.
It is also noted herein that while the above describes example embodiments of the invention, these descriptions should not be viewed in a limiting sense. Rather, there are several variations and modifications which may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention as defined in the appended claims.
The following abbreviations that may be found in the specification and/or the drawing figures are defined as follows:
Reznicek, Alexander, Hekmatshoartabari, Bahman, Balakrishnan, Karthik, Yau, Jeng-Bang
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